Parenthood Boss Would Like to do a Boyhood-Style Reunion Movie

Parenthood boss would like to do a Boyhood-style reunion movie
"I want to know where this family is in three years or five years,” says exec producer Jason Katims, proposing that the cast reunites one week a year for filming. "I want to see what Max is like in his first job. I want to see where these people are down the road. But a million things have to come together in terms of getting all of these people available at the same time. And what's the right context of it all."

With Parenthood done, is the family drama dead?
There won’t be a single quality family drama on network TV following Parenthood’s exit, says Ken Tucker. "At a time when broadcast networks are desperate to attract the kind of critical and social-media acclaim that cable and streaming TV dominate, why are the networks ignoring the family drama?” he wonders.

Extant casts Jeffrey Dean Morgan
The “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Magic City” alum will play a “cop of the future” whose life is changed when he meets Halle Berry’s character.

Simon Helberg can’t escape The Big Bang Theory’s Howard Wolowitz
In promoting his new film "We’ll Never Have Paris,” Helberg says his hit CBS sitcom has been helpful but it has also "actually hindered it a little bit." “Characters are very burned into people’s minds," he adds. "Sometimes people can’t separate that when they go to see you do something else. Sometimes people resent you for that. They pigeonhole you.”

Pivot’s Fortitude combines a murder-mystery with polar bears
TV’s first Arctic murder-mystery starring Stanley Tucci and Michael Gambon "combines the best of scripted and reality programming,” says Mary McNamara, "unfurling the type of complex if invariably grim human drama we have come to expect from short-season cable series in an environment more familiar to fans of 'Ice Road Truckers' or National Geographic channel.”